Polyvinyl alcohol and hydroquinone-based electrolyte coupled with mesoporous carbon nitride for high energy density supercapacitors
Abstract
The pursuit of next-generation supercapacitors with high energy density requires not only the design of robust electrode material, but also the engineering of the electrolyte. Herein, we explore a redox-mediated gel polymer electrolyte (GPE) using polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) and hydroquinone (HQ)/benzoquinone (BQ) couple to enhance the supercapacitive performance of mesoporous graphitic carbon nitride (mg-CN). The mg-CN nanosheet was synthesised via a carboxymethyl cellulose-assisted templating approach. The structural, spectroscopic and textural properties studies revealed the formation of mg-CN with abundant defect sites and sp2 carbon domains as well as a hierarchical porous structure with a surface area of 139 m2 g−1. Owing to the reversible redox reaction of the HQ/BQ couple leading to pseudocapacitance, mg-CN delivered a specific capacitance of 481 F g−1 at a scan rate of 5 mV s−1 in the 1 M H2SO4 + 0.01 HQ-based electrolyte, which is more than twice that of pristine H2SO4 (198 F g−1). Evidently, the capacitive-diffusive current contribution study indicated that 42.71% of the specific capacitance obtained in the HQ-based electrolyte is contributed by a diffusion-controlled process, as compared to the 19.81% obtained in the 1 M H2SO4 electrolyte. A symmetrical supercapacitor device fabricated using the redox-mediated GPE (1 M H2SO4 + PVA + 0.01 M HQ, PVA/HQ) exhibited a remarkable energy density of 47.42 Wh kg−1 at a power density of 6500 W kg−1, along with superior cycling stability. Owing to the improvement in the ionic conductivity of the gel offered by the charge carriers originating from the HQ (1 M H2SO4 + PVA: 371.44 vs. PVA/HQ: 401.81 mS cm−1), the device delivers an energy density of 47.42 Wh kg−1 when the power density is increased to 6500 W kg−1, an indication that the PVA/HQ electrolyte can be employed for the fabrication of a high-rate supercapacitor.

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